Abstract

The article analyzes the features of Sino-Vietnamese asymmetric relations with a powerful destructive potential. The focus is on the elements of the confrontation between China and Vietnam, which prevent the acceleration and expansion of the scope of strategic cooperation. It has been found that bilateral relations between China and Vietnam, although they are developing in the format of "comprehensive strategic cooperation and partnership", did not avoid a confrontation caused by territorial disputes in the South China Sea. Vietnam is experiencing serious discomfort from the strengthening of China’s aggressive regional policy, acquiring a systemic and clearly structured character. The key configurations and trajectories of Vietnam’s basic strategies aimed at containing China, which is trying to gradually reformat the space around it is borders, are explored. It has been established that Sino-Vietnamese relations are a combination of political, ideological and cultural contacts with a complex of contradictions. Despite the weakening of the role of ideological tenets, the Communist Parties of China and Vietnam are too close and control the most important vectors of development of bilateral relations. It was noted that despite the intensification of contradictions, Sino-Vietnamese relations are dynamically developing and evolving and their cooperation to a certain extent is based on the search for compromises, common points of contact between positions and mutually acceptable solutions.

Highlights

  • The article analyzes the features of Sino-Vietnamese asymmetric relations with a powerful destructive potential

  • The focus is on the elements of the confrontation

  • It has been found that bilateral relations between China

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Summary

CONFLICTOGENIC POTENTIAL OF ASYMMETRIC CHINESEVIETNAM RELATIONS

It has been found that bilateral relations between China and Vietnam, they are developing in the format of "comprehensive strategic cooperation and partnership", did not avoid a confrontation caused by territorial disputes in the South China regional policy, acquiring a systemic and clearly structured character. Chinese Assertiveness in the South China Sea and Southeast Asian. Asymmetry and Systemic Misperception: China, Vietnam and Cambodia during the 1970s asymmetry / Brantly Womack // The Journal of Strategic Studies. China and Vietnam: the Politics of Asymmetry / Brantly Womack // New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006. Vietnam and China in an Era of Economic Uncertainty / Brantly Womack // The Asia-Pacific Journal. Asymmetry and China s Tributary System / Brantly Womack // Oxford Journals Social Sciences Chinese Journal of International Politics.

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